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Building a Better Scientific Writer: Strategies for Biology Instructors

Building a Better Scientific Writer: Strategies for Biology Instructors. Roger Graves Director, Writing Across the Curriculum Associate Director, Centre for Teaching and Learning Professor, English and Film Studies University of Alberta. Presentation Overview. Why focus on writing?.

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Building a Better Scientific Writer: Strategies for Biology Instructors

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  1. Building a Better Scientific Writer: Strategies for Biology Instructors Roger Graves Director, Writing Across the Curriculum Associate Director, Centre for Teaching and Learning Professor, English and Film Studies University of Alberta

  2. Presentation Overview

  3. Why focus on writing? • Alexander, C. (2007). Literacy Matters: A Call to Action. Toronto: TD Bank Financial Group Study. • Bloom, M. R., Burrows, M., Lafleur, B., and Squires, R. (1997). The Economic Benefit of Improving Literacy • Skills in the Workplace. Conference Board of Canada, Ottawa. • National Commission on Writing. (2004). Writing: A ticket to work. . . or a ticket out: A survey of business leaders. • Available www.collegeboard.com

  4. Writing & the economy The capacity to write well is among the most universal of skill sets required in the modern workforce. At the same time, preparing students for writingacross the multitude of contexts and modalities they will face in the 21st century economy is extremely challenging. It is a challenge worth investing in: Numerous studies over the past decade have demonstrated that raising national literacy rates have a profound effect on the productivity of the Canadian workforce, the quality of life of individual Canadians, and the size of the Canadian economy (Bloom, Burrows, Lafleur & Squires, 1997; TD Bank, 2007; Fisher & Engelman, 2009). TD Bank (2007) found, for example, that a “1% increase in literacy boosts productivity 2.5% and output 1.5%” (p. 14) leading to a $32 billion increase in income for each 1% increase in national literacy rates. Writing ability is an important part of that picture, defined by the National Commission on Writing (2004) as a threshold skill that factors into hiring and promotion decisions at 52% of the companies they surveyed.

  5. Stages of student development MacDonald, S. P. (2004). Professional and Academic Writing in the Humanities and Social Sciences. Carbondale, IL: Southern Illinois University Press.

  6. Building a better writer Discourse Community Knowledge Subject Matter Knowledge Writing Process Knowledge Rhetorical Knowledge Genre Knowledge Beaufort, A. (2007). College writing and beyond: A new framework for university instruction. Logan, UT: Utah State Press.

  7. Writing process knowledge

  8. Subject matter knowledge

  9. Rhetorical knowledge

  10. Genre knowledge

  11. Recursive, iterative, social

  12. Your teaching is like an iceberg • most of it is under the surface • syllabus is the 1/10 that is visible • it appears frozen but is constantly changing and moving, responding to currents • finished written work by students shows only a fraction of the learning they engaged in http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/ac/Iceberg.jpg

  13. Question 1 • What writing or text-based presentations do you ask your students to do in your class(es)? • If you do not ask them to write or present, could you?

  14. Question 2 • Do you assign the same or similar assignments as other instructors?

  15. Sample biology genres • Paper critique • Blog assignment • Science forum discussion • Scientific proposal • Monograph review • Literature review • Article summary • Discussion • Essay proposal • Project presentation • Lab report • Field notebook • Journal • Poster

  16. Kinds of informal writing assignments Believing and doubting game Focusing a discussion Analysis of events The learning log Project notebooks Analyzing the process The writing journal Problem statement One-minute paper Role playing Frame paragraphs • The reading journal • Solving real problems • Generic and focused summaries • Pre-test warm-ups • Annotations • Using Cases • Response papers • Letters • Synthesis papers • What counts as a fact? • The discussion starter

  17. Question 3 • Do students really connect with those assignments? Asked another way, do students respond to them “authentically” or are they jumping through hoops here?

  18. Question 4 • Are you genuinely (don’t lie to yourself!) interested in reading what they wrote? Even a bit?

  19. Question 5 • Who do you ask students to write for? • Who actually reads what they write: you, other students, some slice of the public?

  20. Question 6 • Do students write or present in groups? Could they?

  21. Exercise 1: Asking good questions • In a file, write a question about some aspect or area of a course you are teaching now or next year. • If possible, focus on an area about which there is disagreement or where there are alternative positions held by people in the field. • If you feel comfortable, post your question to the chat window.

  22. The term paper • Traditional— “fossilized” • Pale reflection of the research process in academic fields • In some contexts, now a pastiche of itself • Revived in part now through undergraduate involvement in research

  23. Exercise 2: Considering alternative • Create an alternative assignment (alternative to the research paper) that you could assign to students. • Describe itin a sentence or two, and if you feel comfortable post it to the chat window.

  24. Alternatives? • Moving from a traditional forensic debate • To • Hospital rounds + Cash Cab bonus questions

  25. New models of writing • Model new assignments on research methods that are new or becoming more dominant in your field: • Participant action research • Predictive statistical modeling • Teacher research • Evidenced-based practice • Multi-disciplinary science (biochemistry) • Bioethics, bioethnography

  26. Create an assignment for one of your topics modeled on an interdisciplinary approach to research. Exercise 3: New models of writing

  27. Pulling it together Consider • Extending the range of genres in the assignments you give to students • Scaffolding assignments so that the term begins with shorter, less complex assignments and ends with larger, extended work • Identifying an audience for one piece of writing that is not the instructor • Assigning students to work in groups on problem-based assignments

  28. WAC Basics

  29. Formal Writing Assignments: Suggestions from Writing Studies Research

  30. Grammar and Errors in Student Writing Responding to Student Writing: Suggestions from Writing Studies Research

  31. Scoring Guides and Rubrics: Suggestions from Writing Studies Research

  32. Teaching Writing in Large Classes

  33. WAC Clearinghouse: Biology resources http://wac.colostate.edu/bib/index.cfm?categoryid=18

  34. STEM database for WAC http://www.refworks.com/refshare/?site=044461177646400000/RWWEB102745464/WTL

  35. Links to resources • My site: http://www.ualberta.ca/~graves1/ • My presentations: http://www.ualberta.ca/~graves1/documents/FacultyandResearch.htm • UAlberta WAC site: http://www.humanities.ualberta.ca/WAC/ • WAC Publications: http://www.humanities.ualberta.ca/WAC/Publications/Publications.aspx

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